| *terminal.txt* For Vim version 8.0. Last change: 2017 Jul 30 |
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| VIM REFERENCE MANUAL by Bram Moolenaar |
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| Terminal window support *terminal* |
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| WARNING: THIS IS ONLY PARTLY IMPLEMENTED, ANYTHING CAN STILL CHANGE |
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| The terminal feature is optional, use this to check if your Vim has it: > |
| echo has('terminal') |
| If the result is "1" you have it. |
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| 1. Basic use |terminal-use| |
| 2. Remote testing |terminal-testing| |
| 3. Debugging |terminal-debug| |
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| {Vi does not have any of these commands} |
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| ============================================================================== |
| 1. Basic use *terminal-use* |
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| This feature is for running a terminal emulator in a Vim window. A job can be |
| started connected to the terminal emulator. For example, to run a shell: > |
| :term bash |
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| Or to run a debugger: > |
| :term gdb vim |
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| The job runs asynchronously from Vim, the window will be updated to show |
| output from the job, also while editing in any other window. |
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| Typing ~ |
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| When the keyboard focus is in the terminal window, typed keys will be send to |
| the job. This uses a pty when possible. You can click outside of the |
| terminal window to move keyboard focus elsewhere. |
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| CTRL-W can be used to navigate between windows and other CTRL-W commands, e.g.: |
| CTRL-W CTRL-W move focus to the next window |
| CTRL-W : enter an Ex command |
| See |CTRL-W| for more commands. |
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| Special in the terminal window: *CTRL-W_.* *CTRL-W_N* |
| CTRL-W . send a CTRL-W to the job in the terminal |
| CTRL-W N go to Terminal Normal mode, see |Terminal-mode| |
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| See option 'termkey' for specifying another key instead of CTRL-W that |
| will work like CTRL-W. However, typing 'termkey' twice sends 'termkey' to |
| the job. For example: |
| 'termkey' CTRL-W move focus to the next window |
| 'termkey' : enter an Ex command |
| 'termkey' 'termkey' send 'termkey' to the job in the terminal |
| 'termkey' . send a CTRL-W to the job in the terminal |
| 'termkey' N go to terminal Normal mode, see below |
| 'termkey' CTRL-N same as CTRL-W N |
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| Size ~ |
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| See option 'termsize' for controlling the size of the terminal window. |
| (TODO: scrolling when the terminal is larger than the window) |
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| Syntax ~ |
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| :ter[minal] [command] *:ter* *:terminal* |
| Open a new terminal window. |
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| If [command] is provided run it as a job and connect |
| the input and output to the terminal. |
| If [command] is not given the 'shell' option is used. |
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| A new buffer will be created, using [command] or |
| 'shell' as the name. If a buffer by this name already |
| exists a number is added in parenthesis. |
| E.g. if "gdb" exists the second terminal buffer will |
| use "gdb (1)". |
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| The window can be closed, in which case the buffer |
| becomes hidden. The command will not be stopped. The |
| `:buffer` command can be used to turn the current |
| window into a terminal window, using the existing |
| buffer. If there are unsaved changes this fails, use |
| ! to force, as usual. |
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| When the buffer associated with the terminal is wiped out the job is killed, |
| similar to calling `job_stop(job, "kill")` |
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| Resizing ~ |
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| The size of the terminal can be in one of three modes: |
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| 1. The 'termsize' option is empty: The terminal size follows the window size. |
| The minimal size is 2 screen lines with 10 cells. |
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| 2. The 'termsize' option is "rows*cols", where "rows" is the minimal number of |
| screen rows and "cols" is the minimal number of cells. |
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| 3. The 'termsize' option is "rowsXcols" (where the x is upper or lower case). |
| The terminal size is fixed to the specified number of screen lines and |
| cells. If the window is bigger there will be unused empty space. |
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| If the window is smaller than the terminal size, only part of the terminal can |
| be seen (the lower-left part). |
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| The |term_getsize()| function can be used to get the current size of the |
| terminal. |term_setsize()| can be used only when in the first or second mode, |
| not when 'termsize' is "rowsXcols". |
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| Terminal Normal mode ~ |
| *Terminal-mode* |
| When the job is running the contents of the terminal is under control of the |
| job. That includes the cursor position. The terminal contents can change at |
| any time. |
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| Use CTRL-W N (or 'termkey' N) to go to Terminal Normal mode. Now the contents |
| of the terminal window is under control of Vim, the job output is suspended. |
| *E946* |
| In this mode you can move the cursor around with the usual Vim commands, |
| Visually mark text, yank text, etc. But you cannot change the contents of the |
| buffer. The commands that would start insert mode, such as 'i' and 'a', |
| return control of the window to the job. Any pending output will now be |
| displayed. |
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| In Terminal mode the statusline and window title show "(Terminal)". If the |
| job ends while in Terminal mode this changes to "(Terminal-finished)". |
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| Unix ~ |
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| On Unix a pty is used to make it possible to run all kinds of commands. You |
| can even run Vim in the terminal! That's used for debugging, see below. |
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| MS-Windows ~ |
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| On MS-Windows winpty is used to make it possible to run all kind of commands. |
| Obviously, they must be commands that run in a terminal, not open their own |
| window. |
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| You need the following two files from winpty: |
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| winpty.dll |
| winpty-agent.exe |
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| You can download them from the following page: |
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| https://github.com/rprichard/winpty |
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| Just put the files somewhere in your PATH. |
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| ============================================================================== |
| 2. Remote testing *terminal-testing* |
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| Most Vim tests execute a script inside Vim. For some tests this does not |
| work, running the test interferes with the code being tested. To avoid this |
| Vim is executed in a terminal window. The test sends keystrokes to it and |
| inspects the resulting screen state. |
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| Functions ~ |
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| term_sendkeys() send keystrokes to a terminal |
| term_wait() wait for screen to be updated |
| term_scrape() inspect terminal screen |
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| ============================================================================== |
| 3. Debugging *terminal-debug* |
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| The Terminal debugging plugin can be used to debug a program with gdb and view |
| the source code in a Vim window. For example: > |
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| :TermDebug vim |
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| This opens three windows: |
| - A terminal window in which "gdb vim" is executed. Here you can directly |
| interact with gdb. |
| - A terminal window for the executed program. When "run" is used in gdb the |
| program I/O will happen in this window, so that it does not interfere with |
| controlling gdb. |
| - A normal Vim window used to show the source code. When gdb jumps to a |
| source file location this window will display the code, if possible. Values |
| of variables can be inspected, breakpoints set and cleared, etc. |
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| This uses two terminal windows. To open the gdb window: > |
| :term gdb [arguments] |
| To open the terminal to run the tested program |term_open()| is used. |
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| TODO |
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| vim:tw=78:ts=8:ft=help:norl: |